| Literature DB >> 31209838 |
Gregory Clark1,2,3, Neil Cummins4,5.
Abstract
Overturning a generation of research, Cinnirella et al. Demography, 54, 413-436 (2017) found strong parity-dependent fertility control in pre-Industrial England 1540-1850. We show that their result is an unfortunate artifact of their statistical method, relying on mother fixed effects, which contradicts basic biological possibilities for fecundity. These impossible parity effects also appear with simulated fertility data that by design have no parity control. We conclude that estimating parity control using mother fixed effects is in no way feasible. We also show, using the Cambridge Group data that Cinnirella et al. used, that there is no sign of parity-dependent fertility control in English marriages before 1850.Entities:
Keywords: Birth intervals; Natural fertility; Parity-specific birth control; Pre-transitional fertility; Spacing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31209838 PMCID: PMC6667415 DOI: 10.1007/s13524-019-00786-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Demography ISSN: 0070-3370
Fig. 1CKW estimated age effects on fecundity, with and without mother-level stratification
Fig. 2Observed and implied birth rates, 30–34, by age at marriage.
Simulation of random fecundity, with no parity control by construction and with net parity
| Hazard of a Birth | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Stratified | (3) | Stratified | |
| (2) | (4) | |||
| Age | 1.309** | 2.596** | ||
| (0.021) | (0.086) | |||
| Age (squared) | 0.994** | 0.987** | ||
| (0.0002) | (0.0004) | |||
| 25–29 | 0.783** | 2.195** | ||
| (0.029) | (0.107) | |||
| 30–34 | 0.548** | 3.858** | ||
| (0.022) | (0.274) | |||
| 35–39 | 0.368** | 4.826** | ||
| (0.016) | (0.433) | |||
| 40–44 | 0.153** | 2.887** | ||
| (0.009) | (0.302) | |||
| 45–49 | 0.021** | 0.439** | ||
| (0.002) | (0.063) | |||
| Net Parity 2 | 1.046** | 0.349** | 1.038* | 0.423** |
| (0.018) | (0.013) | (0.018) | (0.012) | |
| Net Parity 3 | 1.070** | 0.139** | 1.044† | 0.199** |
| (0.024) | (0.009) | (0.024) | (0.009) | |
| Net Parity 4 | 1.105** | 0.063** | 1.044 | 0.102** |
| (0.032) | (0.006) | (0.031) | (0.007) | |
| Net Parity 5 | 1.087* | 0.030** | 1.008 | 0.054** |
| (0.045) | (0.004) | (0.044) | (0.005) | |
| Net Parity 6+ | 0.995 | 0.008** | 0.922 | 0.019** |
| (0.049) | (0.001) | (0.047) | (0.002) | |
| Number of Observations | 33,483 | 33,483 | 33,442 | 33,442 |
Notes: The table presents exponentiated coefficients from a Cox model.
†p < .10; *p < .05; **p < .01
Fig. 3Spurious parity hazards from simulated data. Relative hazards from Cox models on simulated data with no parity control by construction.
Simulation of random fecundity, with no parity control by construction and with survey time as dependent variable
| 20–24 | 25–29 | 30–34 | 35–39 | 40–44 | 45–49 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | |
| Net Parity 2 | 0.513** | 0.421** | 0.201** | 0.063** | 0.000** | 0.000** |
| (0.033) | (0.017) | (0.012) | (0.009) | (0.000) | (0.000) | |
| Net Parity 3 | 0.318** | 0.187** | 0.047** | 0.004** | 0.000** | 0.000** |
| (0.052) | (0.013) | (0.004) | (0.001) | (0.000) | (0.000) | |
| Net Parity 4+ | 0.225** | 0.079** | 0.011** | 0.0003** | 0.000** | 0.000** |
| (0.044) | (0.008) | (0.001) | (0.0001) | (0.000) | (0.000) | |
| Number of Observations | 1,132 | 4,318 | 6,434 | 7,063 | 7,235 | 7,260 |
Notes: The table presents exponentiated coefficients from a Cox model with mother-level stratification.
**p < .01
Fig. 4The fertility history of Margaret Ellmers. 0 is a year without a birth, and 1 is a year when a birth is recorded. The red line is the implied CKW hazard rate.
Fig. 5Censoring in CKW’s analysis
Fig. 6Simple tests of parity control by variations in parity, from age at marriage and observed birth rates: Cambridge Group data